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Epigrams on Lord Castlereagh


[Page 164]   

            France had the man, but gave him those
            Whom he had taken for her by the nose;
            England had her’s, and has him still,
            Who’ll cut her own throat for her, if she will


                                ____________


                 EPIGRAMS ON LORD CASTLEREAGH.(1)

Oh, CASTLEREAGH! thou art a patriot now;
Cato(2) died for his country, so did’st thou;
He perish’d rather than see Rome enslav’d,(3)
Thou cut’st thy throat, that Britain may be sav’d.(4)


                                        ______

So CASTLEREAGH has cut his throat!—The worst
Of this is,—that his own was not the first.


                                        ______

So He has cut his throat at last!—He! Who?
The man who cut his country’s long ago.





                                ____________



EDITORIAL NOTES

[1] Robert Stewart (1769-1822), Marquess of Londonderry. British statesman and politician known as Lord Castlereagh owing to his courtesy title Viscount Castlereagh. 
[2] Marcus Porcius Cato Uticensis, or Cato the Younger (95 BC-46 BC), conservative senator during the late Roman Republic. 
[3] After the defeat of the forces loyal to the Roman Senate at the Battle of Thapsus (46 BCE), Cato refused to surrender to Caesar and to live under a regime he considered illegitimate; he chose death as the ultimate act of defiance and resistance. His suicide was a deliberate political statement, and turned him into a martyr.
[4] Robert Stewart, Lord Castlereagh, took his own life in 1822, exacerbated by intense political pressure.

Ultimo aggiornamento

09.03.2025

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